GBS Insider ClubField Guide Free
Transition Strategy June 2026

Pillar 10 · Cluster 1

GBS transition strategy and planning

Transitioning work from local operations to a GBS center is the defining moment of shared services. The methodology, due diligence, and governance you apply determine whether the transition delivers value or creates chaos.

12-18 monthsTypical timeline for a major GBS transition wave
30%Of transitions experience significant scope changes
3 gatesMinimum governance checkpoints for transition programs
GBS transition strategy — models, lifecycle, scope definition, governance, due diligence

Transition strategy — models, lifecycle, governance, and due diligence

Topic 01 · Methodology

Lift and Shift vs Transform and Transfer

TL;DR

Lift-and-shift moves the process as-is, then improves; transform changes it during the move. The choice sets the whole project’s risk profile. The model is in THE FIX.

Move it as-is, or fix it in flight?
Pick your risk.

2 min read · full theory in the expandable
The Problem
P
Priya
Process SME · Migration + BAU · Bangalore

Priya’s migration steering debates for an hour: clean up the process during the move, or move first and fix later?

The veteran in the room ends it: "Change the place or change the process. Changing both at once is how transitions fail."
Lift-and-shift wins. Improvement gets its own phase — after stability.

"One variable at a time. Even in transformations."

She feels settled about a call she could now defend.

The Trap

You bundle relocation and redesign to save time — and double the failure modes instead.

The Fix

Two strategies, one honest trade.

LIFT & SHIFTMove as-is. Lower risk, faster stabilization — inefficiencies travel with it, fixed later.
TRANSFORMRedesign in flight. Bigger payoff, double variables — process risk on top of transition risk.
THE DEFAULTShift, stabilize, then transform. Sequenced beats simultaneous in most GBS moves.

The as-is move stabilizes in weeks. The improvement backlog starts from a running process, not a wobbling one.

Lift-and-shift vs transform in depthTHEORY · 4 MIN

The fundamental strategic choice: move the process as-is and improve later, or redesign before migrating. Each approach has trade-offs in speed, risk, and long-term value.

Every organization standing up a GBS faces the same binary choice: migrate first and improve later, or redesign first and migrate to the new standard.

  • The choice shapes your program timeline and risk profile
  • It drives your change management approach — one change cycle vs two
  • Ultimately determines whether GBS runs as a cost center or a transformation engine

Lift and Shift

12–18 months
Replicate, then standardize, then optimize
  • Migrate processes as-is to the GBS center
  • Preserve current process variants during transition
  • Standardize and optimize after stabilisation
  • Speed-to-value is the primary driver
  • Two change cycles: migration, then transformation
  • Transform and Transfer

    18–30 months
    Redesign, then migrate, then stabilise
  • Design the harmonized target state before migration
  • Eliminate process variants by design
  • Migrate directly to the new standard
  • Step-change improvement is the primary driver
  • One concentrated change cycle
  • Phase view / Lift and Shift
    M0M2M4M7M10M18+ 01 Mobilise 4–6 weeks 02 AS-IS docs 6–8 weeks 03 Migration 8–12 wk / wave 04 Stabilise 8–12 weeks 05 Optimize 6–18 months G1 G2 G3 G4 G5 KEY DELIVERABLES Program charterWave migration planLocation assessmentBaseline cost model AS-IS process mapsVariant matrixKT documentationSystem dependency map Trained GBS teamParallel run resultsSLAs per entityOps handbook Hypercare dashboardException logLessons learnedBAU handover cert Standard process libraryAutomation pipelineCI roadmapBenefits realisation TYPICAL ACTIVITIES Scope definitionSite selectionGovernance setup Process mappingSME interviewsTribal knowledge capture Recruit and trainParallel runWave go-live SLA monitoringException handlingCapacity adjustment Harmonize variantsRPA / AI buildLean / Six Sigma G1 Scope sign-off | G2 Docs complete | G3 Go-live ready | G4 Hypercare exit | G5 Benefits realisation
    Phase view / Transform and Transfer
    M0M3M6M10M14M30+ 01 Discovery 6–10 weeks 02 Target design 10–14 weeks 03 Build 12–16 weeks 04 Test 6–8 weeks 05 Deploy 8–12 wk + ongoing G1 G2 G3 G4 G5 KEY DELIVERABLES Maturity assessmentBenchmark analysisOpportunity heat mapDetailed business case TO-BE process libraryTOM blueprintTech architectureService catalog + SLAs Configured systemsAutomation workflowsTraining curriculumData migration scripts UAT sign-offCutover planReadiness scorecardRollback procedures Go-live per entityAdoption dashboardsBenefits trackerCI pipeline TYPICAL ACTIVITIES AS-IS assessmentIndustry benchmarkingValue quantification Process harmonizationTOM design workshopsChange impact analysis ERP configurationBuild automationsData migration UAT executionCutover rehearsalReadiness assessment Wave go-livesHypercareAdoption tracking G1 Business case | G2 Design sign-off | G3 SIT complete | G4 Go / no-go | G5 Benefits realisation
    DimensionLift and ShiftTransform and Transfer
    Time to first value3–4 months6–10 months
    Total duration12–18 months18–30 months
    Upfront investmentLowerHigher
    Long-term savingsModerateHigher
    Process debt riskHighLow
    Automation readinessDelayedImmediate
    Typical failure modeDebt never resolvedAnalysis paralysis
    FROM THE FIELD

    Most successful GBS transformations use a hybrid: transform and transfer as the strategic frame, with tactical lift and shift for early waves to build credibility.

    • You earn board credibility in Wave 1 and spend it on the design time you need for the harder towers
    • Pure transform and transfer from day one is how you get funding pulled in month nine — the board sees no results
    When to use each approach
    • For first-wave transitions, Lift and Shift is usually safer — establish credibility with reliable delivery, then improve. Trying to transform and transition simultaneously doubles the risk.
    • For subsequent waves, Transform and Transfer makes more sense — you have the operational maturity to absorb change, and stakeholders have seen the GBS model work.
    • The worst outcome is an unofficial hybrid: claiming Lift and Shift but allowing ad-hoc process changes during transition without formal change control.
    • Wave sequencing matters: start with high-volume, low-complexity processes to build momentum and credibility before tackling complex, exception-heavy towers.
    Monday Move

    For any move you are near: name which strategy it runs. If both at once — ask who decided that.

    Topic 02 · Scoping

    Due diligence and scope validation

    TL;DR

    Due diligence validates what the process really is before committing to move it. The documented process and the real one always differ. The model is in THE FIX.

    The handbook says four steps.
    The team runs eleven.

    2 min read · full theory in the expandable
    The Problem
    K
    Klaudia
    Senior associate · Year 3 · Krakow

    Klaudia validates scope for an incoming process. The documentation: clean, four steps, two systems.

    Two days of shadowing the sending team: eleven real steps, four side systems, three undocumented workarounds, one person doing "a bit extra" nobody mentioned.
    The transition plan was built on the four-step fiction.

    "We almost signed up to move a process that does not exist."

    She feels vindicated for insisting on the shadowing days.

    The Trap

    You size the transition on documentation and inherit the undocumented reality at go-live.

    The Fix

    Due diligence is verification in person.

    SHADOWWatch the real work. Days at the desk beat weeks of document review.
    COUNT EVERYTHINGVolumes, exceptions, side systems. The "bit extra" tasks are scope too.
    RE-BASELINEPlan on findings, not claims. Effort, timeline, and FTE ask update before signing.

    The plan grows to fit reality before commitment — a hard conversation in week two instead of a crisis in month four.

    Due diligence and scope validation in depthTHEORY · 4 MIN

    Before committing to a transition, you need to know exactly what you are taking on — volume, complexity, exceptions, dependencies, and the political landscape.

    Due diligence checklist
    • Process inventory — document every process in scope with volumes, frequency, FTE count, and system dependencies
    • Exception analysis — identify the non-standard cases, workarounds, and manual interventions that formal documentation misses
    • Stakeholder mapping — who currently owns the process, who will be affected, and who has veto power
    • System access requirements — what ERP roles, application access, and security clearances are needed
    • Regulatory constraints — data residency, licensing, language requirements, and country-specific compliance rules
    • People implications — impact on existing team (redeployment, redundancy, retention), hiring needs at receiving site
    The hidden complexity

    Due diligence always underestimates complexity.

    • The formal process documentation shows the happy path.
    • The reality includes 47 exception types, 12 manual workarounds, 3 undocumented approvals, and knowledge that exists only in one person's head.
    • Build contingency into every timeline and cost estimate. If the due diligence says 6 months, plan for 9.
    DUE DILIGENCE Process volume & complexity Current FTE & skill requirements Technology & system landscape Regulatory & compliance constraints Stakeholder readiness & risk SKIP DUE DILIGENCE → PAY 10x LATER

    Due diligence — process, FTE, technology, regulatory, cultural

    Monday Move

    Before your next handover of any kind: shadow the real work for half a day. Count the undocumented.

    Reality validated. Gates keep it honest from here.

    ? CHALLENGE YOURSELF click to expand
    • Can you explain the difference between lift-and-shift and transform methodologies? When would you recommend each approach?
    • Have you participated in a due diligence exercise? Do you know what information needs to be validated before a transition can proceed?
    • Does your organization use formal gate reviews for transitions? What criteria must be met before moving to the next phase?

    Topic 03 · Governance

    Transition governance and gate reviews

    TL;DR

    Transition governance means gates with real criteria — and the authority to say "not yet." A gate nobody can fail is a ceremony. The model is in THE FIX.

    The gate review passed everything.
    That was the warning sign.

    2 min read · full theory in the expandable
    The Problem
    P
    Peter
    Team lead · Year 2 · Budapest

    Peter sits in a readiness gate. Criteria half-met, training incomplete — and the date pressure is enormous.

    The room leans toward "conditional pass." The transition lead stops it: criteria are criteria.
    Go-live moves two weeks. The noise is loud for a day.

    "A gate that cannot say no is a rubber stamp with a meeting invite."

    He feels respect for the first "not yet" he has seen survive date pressure.

    The Trap

    You let the go-live date outrank the readiness criteria — and pay the difference in hypercare.

    The Fix

    Real gates have three properties.

    CRITERIA FIRSTWritten before, measured against. Knowledge transferred, UAT passed, staff ready — binary where possible.
    REAL AUTHORITYThe gate can delay. If no one may say "not yet," delete the meeting.
    CONDITIONS TRACKEDConditional passes have owners and dates. Or they are just soft fails with better optics.

    The two-week delay lands quietly. The go-live that follows needs half the hypercare anyone budgeted.

    Transition governance and gate reviews in depthTHEORY · 4 MIN

    Gate reviews are the governance mechanism that prevents transitions from advancing when they are not ready. Each gate requires defined exit criteria to be met before proceeding.

    1

    Gate 1 — Scope Approval

    Confirm the scope, timeline, resource plan, and business case. Approve the transition charter. Exit criteria: signed-off scope document, approved budget, assigned project team.

    2

    Gate 2 — Readiness

    Confirm that the receiving team is trained, systems are configured, test scenarios are validated, and operational procedures are documented. Exit criteria: completed KT, successful parallel run, updated SOPs.

    3

    Gate 3 — Go-Live

    Confirm that Service Acceptance Criteria (SAC) are met, hypercare plan is in place, and escalation paths are defined. Exit criteria: SAC sign-off, hypercare team staffed, rollback plan documented.

    G1 Scope Approval Charter · Budget · Team signed off G2 Readiness KT complete · Parallel run SOPs updated G3 Go-Live SAC sign-off · Hypercare Rollback plan ready
    Each gate needs exit criteria met before proceeding.
    TRANSITION LIFECYCLE ASSESSDue diligence DESIGNTarget operating model MIGRATEKT & go-live STABILIZEHypercare OPTIMIZECI handover EACH PHASE HAS GATE CRITERIA · DON'T SKIP GATES

    Transition lifecycle — assessment through optimization

    Monday Move

    Read your next gate’s criteria in advance. Ask which ones are binary — and who may say no.

    BLIND SPOT

    The smartest transition plans invest in both sides — the receiving hub and the retained organization. Most playbooks focus heavily on the team taking over. That makes sense, but the retained team needs just as much clarity.

    • They need to know how the new process works and who to contact at the hub
    • They need to understand the handoff points and what to expect post-go-live
    • When both sides are prepared, transitions land cleaner and stabilize faster
    • A clear retained-org playbook is one of the highest-impact things you can advocate for — often the difference between a smooth landing and months of firefighting
    ? CAREER CHECK click to expand
    • Transition experience is some of the most valuable on a GBS resume. Have you been involved in one, and how did you capture that experience?
    • Could you lead a due diligence workstream for your process area? What would you need to prepare, and who would you involve?
    • Understanding transition governance positions you for project management and operational leadership roles. Where is your exposure strongest?
    GBS Insider Club learning paths offer structured career frameworks, practical templates, and guided exercises tailored to your GBS role — from entry-level to leadership.

    Reference

    Glossary

    Full glossary at the GBS Insider Club Field Guide.

    Lift & ShiftTransition methodology where processes are moved to the GBS center as-is, without redesign. Prioritizes speed and stability over optimization.
    Transform & TransferTransition methodology where the target operating model is designed and processes are harmonized before migration. Also called Lift & Fix. Higher investment upfront but delivers a cleaner end state with immediate automation readiness.
    Due diligenceThe investigation and analysis conducted before committing to a transition. Covers process inventory, volume analysis, complexity assessment, and risk identification.
    Gate reviewA formal governance checkpoint where defined criteria must be met before a transition advances to the next phase. Prevents premature go-live.
    Transition charterThe governing document that defines the transition scope, objectives, timeline, governance structure, and success criteria.
    Parallel runA testing phase where both the sending and receiving teams process the same transactions simultaneously to validate accuracy before full cutover.
    Sources and further reading
    1. SSON — GBS Transition Best Practices Guide, 2025
    2. Deloitte — Shared Services Transition Playbook, 2024
    3. Everest Group — GBS Transition Assessment Framework, 2025
    4. McKinsey — Delivering large-scale transformation programs, 2024
    Theory done. Now make it count.

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    The GBS Insider Club Career Playbooks turn this theory into a guided 90-day program for your role: self-assessment, practical exercises, templates, and Julian's unfiltered practitioner playbook.

    Explore the Career Playbooks → Back to GBS Transition
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